Bury F.C.

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Bury F.C.
Image:Bury Badge.gif
Full name Bury Football Club
Nickname(s) The Shakers</td></tr> Founded 1885
Ground Gigg Lane
Bury
Greater Manchester
England
(Capacity 11,669)
Manager Image:Flag of Wales 2.svg Alan Knill
League League Two
2007–08 League Two, 13th
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Home colours
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Away colours
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Bury Football Club are an English association football team based in Bury, Greater Manchester. The team are currently playing in Football League Two.

Contents

History

The club was formed in 1885, and took a lease on a pitch at Gigg Lane, which remains their home today. In 1889 they were founder members of the Lancashire League, before joining the Football League Second Division in 1894, which they won at the first attempt. They beat Liverpool in a play-off to clinch promotion to Division One. They stayed there until 1912.

Bury have won the FA Cup twice. On April 21, 1900 they beat Southampton 4-0 at Crystal Palace, and before returning to the London venue in 1903. The latter win was achieved without conceding a goal in the entire competition, including a record FA Cup Final score of 6-0 over Derby County on April 18. The 1903 cup also had another great achievement for Bury as the 6-o scoreline still remains as the highest ever win in an FA Cup final which all players received a medal for.

In 1923 they were promoted again, and in 1926 they achieved their highest League position ever, 4th in the First Division. But two years later they were relegated and never played top flight football again. Steady decline followed and by 1971, they had reached the Fourth Division for the first time.

They are nicknamed 'The Shakers' due to first chairman, JT Ingham who, before a Lancashire Cup game with Blackburn, said "We will shake them. In fact, we are the Shakers." Local rivals include Bolton Wanderers, Oldham Athletic and Rochdale.

Image:Bury1892.jpg
The Bury team pictured in 1892

Bury have produced great players over the years, including Les Hart, Dean Kiely, Terry McDermott, Alec Lindsay, Colin Bell, Neville Southall, Craig Madden, Lee Dixon and Roger Stanislaus. Perhaps Bury's most infamous player has been David Adekola, a Nigerian who came to Bury after successfully convincing football officials that he was a former Nigerian international player with top flight experience in Europe, though no records of such claims exist. Their recent history has witnessed some great success with youth development, with players such as Colin Kazim-Richards, David Nugent and Simon Whaley moving onto Premiership and Championship clubs to great acclaim.

Recently Bury became the first football club to score a thousand goals in each of the top four tiers of the English football league. [1]

Currently they are in the 4th tier of English football, League Two. They were relegated to this level in the 2001-02 season - only ten years beforehand they were one promotion away from returning to the top flight. They also played in Football League First Division, which was second tier of English league system between 1997-1999.

In late 2006, Bury enjoyed their best of run of form for the past decade with six consecutive league victories. They drew 2-2 away at Weymouth F.C. in the FA Cup on 12 November, 2006. This game was notable as being Bury's first ever live appearance on extra terrestrial TV and attracted a respectable average audience of 2 million, peaking at 2.6 million just before the end. However on December 20, 2006 they were the first team to ever be thrown out of the competition for fielding an ineligible player.[2]

After the FA Cup debacle, Bury failed to win in 16 games, and relegation to the Conference for the first time in the club's history became a possibility. Bury survived the relegation battle of the 2006/07 season, where a 0-0 draw with Stockport County ensured they would stay up to play another season in League Two.

In 31-year-old Chris Casper, Bury did have the League's youngest manager. In the past, they have been managed by Mike Walsh, Stan Ternent, Neil Warnock, Andy Preece, and Les Hart, who was both captain, physiopherapist and coach with 44 years service to the club. More recently Casper had asked Martin Scott to step in as the new assistant manager due to the departure of Ian Miller to Leicester City.During the close season former Lincoln City manager Keith Alexander was appointed Director of Football.

Following a heavy defeat at the hands of Darlington, it was announced on the 14th January 2008 that Chris Casper and Keith Alexander had left the club, the board terminating the pair's contracts simultaneously. A club statement said the pair had "lost the confidence of a large majority of the fans". Chris Brass, formerly the manager of the club's Centre of Excellence, was given the vacant manager's post on a caretaker basis. His first match in charge resulted in a cup upset, the Shakers knocking Norwich City out of the FA Cup in the third round. Despite this early success, results remained inconsistent, and a more full time solution was sought by the board.

On the 4th February, the club revealed Alan Knill to be their new manager. Knill had made more than 150 appearances for the Shakers as a central defender between 1989 and 1993. More recently, Knill had been employed at Chesterfield, as their assistant manager.

Their home, Gigg Lane, is also home to F.C. United of Manchester who rent the ground from Bury F.C. this season Bury finished 13th in the table which is one of their highest finishes in 5 seasons

Honours

Leagues

Cups

Players

As of 6 October 2007.

Current squad

No. Position Player
2 Image:Flag of England.svg DF Paul Scott
4 Image:Flag of England.svg DF Ben Futcher
6 Image:Ulster banner.svg MF Paul Morgan
7 Image:Flag of England.svg DF Steve Haslam
8 Image:Flag of England.svg MF Ritchie Baker
9 Image:Flag of South Africa.svg FW Glynn Hurst
10 Image:Flag of England.svg FW Andy Bishop
11 Image:Flag of Ireland.svg MF Brian Barry-Murphy
No. Position Player
12 Image:Ulster banner.svg MF David Buchanan
16 Image:Flag of Wales 2.svg MF Nicky Adams
18 Image:Flag of England.svg MF Dale Stephens
22 Image:Flag of England.svg FW Domaine Rouse
24 Image:Flag of England.svg MF Jack Dorney
26 Image:Flag of England.svg DF Ricky Anane
30 Image:Flag of England.svg GK Cameron Belford

Notable players

Famous former players include:

Benin
England

India
Northern Ireland

Republic of Ireland
Turkey
Wales
Zimbabwe

Supporters

  • Film director Danny Boyle is a fan of Bury FC and watches the games at the Gigg Lane on a regular basis [1].
  • The radio broadcaster Mike Read is a regular fan as is musician Mark E Smith of The Fall.
  • In 2002, club's Press Officer, Gordon Sorfleet, was awarded the UEFA Supporter of the Year Award for his work on behalf of the club. [2] [3]
  • Actress and model Gemma Atkinson is known to be a supporter and appeared on BSkyB's, 'Soccer AM' at the start of the 2007/08 football season as a 'soccerette', unveiling the club's new away shirt. [4]

References

  1. ^ "1000 goals for Bury", 2005-08-25. Retrieved on 2007-10-01. 
  2. ^ "Chester take Bury's FA Cup place", BBC News, 2006-12-20. Retrieved on 2006-12-20. 

External links

da:Bury F.C.

de:FC Bury fr:Bury Football Club id:Bury F.C. it:Bury F.C. lb:Bury FC lt:Bury FC nl:Bury FC ja:ベリーFC no:Bury FC pl:Bury F.C. sv:Bury FC zh:貝里足球俱樂部

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